
Syracuse University SURFACE Syracuse University Honors Program Capstone Syracuse University Honors Program Capstone Projects Projects Spring 5-1-2012 Counter-Reformation: the Search for a Unified John Donne Bailey Susan Fitzgerald Syracuse University Follow this and additional works at: https://surface.syr.edu/honors_capstone Part of the Literature in English, British Isles Commons Recommended Citation Fitzgerald, Bailey Susan, "Counter-Reformation: the Search for a Unified John Donne" (2012). Syracuse University Honors Program Capstone Projects. 132. https://surface.syr.edu/honors_capstone/132 This Honors Capstone Project is brought to you for free and open access by the Syracuse University Honors Program Capstone Projects at SURFACE. It has been accepted for inclusion in Syracuse University Honors Program Capstone Projects by an authorized administrator of SURFACE. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Counter-Reformation: the Search for a Unified John Donne A Capstone Project Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements of the Renée Crown University Honors Program at Syracuse University Bailey Susan Fitzgerald Candidate for B.S. Degree and Renée Crown University Honors May 2012 Honors Capstone Project in English and Textual Studies Capstone Project Advisor: _______________________ Professor Dympna Callaghan Capstone Project Reader: _______________________ Professor Rory Loughnane Honors Director: _______________________ Stephen Kuusisto, Director Date: 4/25/2012 ii Abstract The agenda of this paper is a re-examination of the de-facto formation of a literary character. John Donne is one of history’s most celebrated metaphysical poets. A quasi-contemporary of William Shakespeare, his biography has been similarly (if obviously to a lesser degree) plumbed. The turn of the 17 th century offers, in terms of hard facts, only tantalizing details left by fortuitous accident, and it has been the realm of biographers and early modern scholars to piece together the fragments. In the case of John Donne, this has manifested as a genealogy of literary biography that frequently melds scant fact, poetic manuscripts, and agreed upon assumptions to give us an image of a man who is less person than personification of the tumultuous and revolutionary times in which he lived. The image formed of John Donne is a chronologically distinct collection of personalities: the scholar, the rogue, the soldier and the theologian, culminating in a dichotomy between the youthful Jack Donne, and the revered Dr. Donne. This paper will seek to trouble that construction in two ways. In the first part, the paper will examine three major literary biographies which helped to construct this image—John Donne: A Life, by R.C. Bald, John Donne: Life, Mind, and Art by John Carey, and Donne: The Reformed Soul , by John Stubbs—and deconstruct their conclusions. In the second part of the paper, I will address the poetic canon of John Donne. In the collusion of both I will attempt to propose a unified John Donne, replete with biographical and literary continuity. iii Acknowledgements This project has been underway for two years, since the fall of 2010, when I began the process of sifting through vast amounts of material, cloistered within the comforting confines of a reading room at the British Library at St. Pancreas, London. My wonderful advisor, Professor Dympna Callaghan has been metaphorically by my side the whole way, starting work on this project even before I did, compiling a reading list that was in and of itself several pages long ‘just to get me started’. She has been a crucial supporter, a vital resource, and a mentor who has inspired me since my very first day on campus four years ago. I know that I would have quit before I even started but for her. My reader for this project, Professor Rory Loughnane, is inaptly titled. I was truly blessed to find in him not only a reader but actually another full-fledged advisor who for months has gone above and beyond the call of duty to contribute to this paper from the first draft. I asked him for a huge favor, and he upped the ante, making himself available to be an exceptional resource from our first meeting onward. I am extremely honored by and grateful for all of the hard work that he has done on my behalf. Finally, my ETS Distinction Workshop advisor, Professor Jolynn Parker has poured an exceptional amount of time and effort into not only this paper, but a workshop full of distinction projects. She has been a teacher, a cheerleader, a big sister, and a psychotherapist to a workshop full of highly neurotic students, not to mention her indefatigable line by line editing of draft after draft. Thank you for providing the strength we need to survive this process—and thank you so much for the cookies! iv Table of Contents Abstract……………………………………….……………….………….. ii Acknowledgements …………..……………………………………...…… iii Introduction ………….…………………………………………………… 2 Part One: Biography ……………………………………………………… 9 Chapter I. From Scholar to Soldier ……………………...……….. 10 Chapter II. From Secretary to Politician …..………………………. 23 Chapter III. From Rogue to Husband ……..………………………. 29 Chapter IV. A Learned Divine and a Powerful Preacher: From Recusant to Dean ……….……………………………. 42 Part Two: Poetry ……………………………………………………… 53 A Note on Methods …………..……………………………………. 54 Chapter V. On Erotic Violence ……………………………………. 58 Chapter VI. On Conquest and World Politics…………………...…. 66 Chapter VII. On Death and Resurrection…………………………... 70 Post Script ………….…………………………………………………… 74 Bibliography …….…………..………………………………………..… 79 Capstone Summary ……….....………………………………………… 84 1 “For God's sake hold your tongue, and let me love.” — John Donne, The Canonization 2 Introduction In 1595, when John Donne was about twenty three years old, he sat for a portrait. Long and dimly lit, the painting is dark in both color and theme. The young man portrayed is good looking, and fashionably dressed. His posture is easy and confident as he leans forward towards the viewer, and his broad hat is provocatively set at an extreme angle that can only be described as rakish. Although dark, his clothes are heavily embroidered — this is clearly a young man who takes great care with his appearance. The Donne portrayed here is not effusing the joy and energy of youth, however. This Donne has a long thin face, and his wistful expression is coupled with shadowed eyes and an undone collar, whose strings hang down in disarray, a contrast to the attention to detail within the embellishment of the outfit. His fingers, resting lightly against the black of his coat are starkly white and almost painfully thin. The long fingers are delicate and aristocratic. These are the sensitive hands of a poet. The Latin inscription is plaintive, “O Lady, lighten our darkness” i. This is Jack Donne, the youthful poet and lover, the amorous, passionate scholar. He is known as a clandestine catholic, the scion of a legacy tracing back to the martyrdom of Sir Thomas Moore. He is a young dilettante, with a sizeable inheritance. He is an ambitious political neophyte, with the ambition to 3 unscrupulously rise to the highest arenas at court. He is the would-be adventurer, eager for the glory and wealth associated with conquest. But perhaps most famously, he is a reckless suitor, a ‘great visitor of ladies’ (R. Baker), a Don Juan of ill repute and great reputation. This vision of John Donne is in stark contrast to another famous image: Martin Droeshout’s famous engraving that served as the frontispiece to a 1633 publication of Donne’s final sermon, “Death’s Duell. ii ” The engraving carries an inscription below the portrait, a quote commonly attributed to Donne, “Corporis hæc Animæ sit Syndon Syndon Jesu / Amen” (or “May this shroud of the body be the shroud of the soul: the shroud of Jesus) iii .” The engraving is in fact a rendering of a work drawing made for Nicholas Stone’s marble monument to Donne that stands today in St. Paul’s Cathedral iv . The portrait depicts an aged and ailing Donne, hollow cheeked and serious. The eyes are closed, in death or sleep, or perhaps even piety. The strong gaze so manifest in the 1595 portrait, the intense gaze that connects the viewer to Donne is totally absent. This face suggests a mind not directed out into the world but rather internally. Strikingly, the figure is clad in a funeral shroud, embodying death and otherworldliness as much as it is possible to do so. This Donne is Dr. Donne, the Dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral. He is a church elder, a devout Anglican. He is the head of a family and a favored preacher of King James. He is a theologian, obsessed with death and the métier of the soul. The extreme disparity between the portraits typifies the perceived disparities between Jack Donne and Doctor Donne, prompting posterity to ask 4 “how could the reckless young lover possibly become the gaunt and contemplative man of the church”? When faced with the comparison of two such evidently different characters, the reconciliation of the two is often achieved through a narrative of personal revolution. Because the characters are so very different, they are often treated as not so much the extreme evolution of one man as two different people, sometimes many more than two. This is not wholly a trope of scholars, or even one that dates exclusively from this century. John Donne himself was responsible for the dissemination of these images, a sort of early modern public relations campaign. This image has grown since then, and it has become a given in Donne’s biographies. Donne’s most influential modern biographers, R.C. Bald, John Carey, and John Stubbs, all capitulate to the idea of a Donne who is a moving target, whose personality is never quite stable enough to pin down. Bald’s John Donne: A Life , in the words of the Encyclopedia Britannica, “remains the definitive biography”.
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